What the study found: Adding morphological asymmetry between leading and following sunspots improved a century-long reconstruction of the Sun’s magnetic field. The improved surface flux transport model better matched observed magnetic flux and polar field behavior than a version without asymmetry.
Why the authors say this matters: The authors say accurate modeling of the solar magnetic field is important for understanding long-term solar activity and space weather. The findings indicate that better reproducing polar field evolution may be important for solar cycle prediction.
What the researchers tested: The researchers used an improved surface flux transport model, which simulates how magnetic flux moves across the solar surface and contributes to the polar field. They combined observationally derived tilt angles and sunspot area data from 1913 to 2016 with two asymmetry cases: a long-term asymmetry factor from leading and following sunspot area ratios, and a temporal asymmetry factor from solar cycle 23 applied to every cycle.
What worked and what didn't: Including morphological asymmetry improved the simulated magnetic flux transport in both cases compared with the no-asymmetry case. The simulations showed enhanced low- and midlatitude magnetic flux and closer agreement with observations, and the polar fields better matched observations for most cycles, especially for the timing of polar field reversals and the peak amplitude during solar minima. The abstract does not report specific failures beyond the no-asymmetry comparison being less accurate.
What to keep in mind: The available summary does not describe detailed limitations beyond the challenge of limited observations, especially near the Sun’s poles. The study focuses on reconstructed behavior over 1913–2016 and on the two asymmetry cases described in the abstract.
Key points
- A surface flux transport model with sunspot asymmetry improved century-long solar magnetic field reconstruction.
- The model used tilt angles and sunspot area data from 1913 to 2016.
- Two asymmetry approaches were tested: a long-term area-ratio factor and a solar-cycle-23-based factor applied to all cycles.
- Including asymmetry improved low- and midlatitude magnetic flux and matched observations more closely.
- Polar field reversals and peak polar field amplitude during solar minima were reproduced better in most cycles.
Disclosure
- Research title:
- Asymmetric sunspots improved century-long solar magnetic field reconstruction
Get the weekly research newsletter
Stay current with peer-reviewed research without reading academic papers — one filtered digest, every Friday.


